These instructions are intended for those trying to find step-by-step instructions on how to get the 9265-8i hardware monitoring going under ESXi 5.1. Glad to have this published just 4 days of ESXi 5.1's release. While the 92xx drivers are baked right in to your ESXi 5.1, determining the health of your BBU and RAID is not. That's no way to operate your RAID, blind to its health. So with these instructions, that'll likely work fine with any of the 92xx family of LSI RAID cards, you should be able to fix this, in roughly 15 minutes.

Know that getting the LSI 9265-8i recognized and supported under ESXi 5.0 was considerably more difficult, perhaps one reason that the previous article is one my site's most popular ever, with over 18,000 unique pageviews and growing:

Apparently a LOT of folks buy LSI for ESXi, seen here, and like the idea of hardware/software independent SSD caching of ESXi (see LSI interoperability report), a key reason I chose the 9265-8i RAID adapter back in the summer of 2011 for vZilla. The LSI 9266-8i is identical, same chips and drivers and specs/speeds, really just a new layout and nicer battery backup unit.

Sep. 17 2012 Update, the 9266-8i has been confirmed to work, by TinkerTry site visitor Peter.

scroll to MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE AND TOOLS, and find the green arrow next to VMware SMIS Provider VIB - 5.3 Version 00.03.V0.03 to kick off the download, this should work for entire 92xx family, I tested on the LSI 9265-8i with ESXi 5.1:

You can use vSphere Client Datastore Browser to do this, or something like freeware WinSCP and its easy GUI. Linux clients native scp will do nicely too.

If using WinSCP, just point it to your ESX host IP, then drag-and-drop:
vmware-esx-provider-lsiprovider.vib
into the ESXi 5.1 host's /tmp directory

5) Put ESXi into Maintenance Mode
Shutdown or suspend all your active VMs on that host, then right-click on ESXi host, and choose Enter Maintenance Mode" as recommended by LSI technical support.

6) Install it
Then, at PuTTY (SSH for Windows) session on the ESXi 5.1 host, I do the following 2 commands (the no-sig-check is important, because you'll get errors about signing if you don't, it's a 3rd party piece of software):

And after nothing appears to happen for about a minute, then it'll suddenly confirm it worked, telling you the LSI_bootbank_lsiprovider_500.04.V0.30-3000000 was installed:

7) Reboot it
Go ahead and close the PuTTY session window and reboot now, using whatever your favorite method of a rebooting is.

Then log back in to the ESXi host using the vSphere Client, in this case logged into the ESXi host (no vCenter), and you'll now "see" the health of the 9265-8i, over on the Configuration tab. Strangely, I can also now see the health of my MediaSonic external RAID5 array as well, nice!

Optionally, you can now set up triggers and alarms for RAID health events (detailed in video). Over time, I will continue to refine/clarify this article, incorporating your feedback in comments below. I also hope to get MSM (MegaRAID Storage Manager) working from within ESXi (supposedly possible, according to an LSI engineer at the VMworld 2012 booth).

The video below is really just a reference, in case you get tripped up somewhere following these screenshots. You'll see me stumble along for a bit to get it eventually working, since some of the steps were not well-documented anywhere. But they are now!

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